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Dr. V. (Vaira) Vīķe-Freiberga - Hoofdinhoud

Dr. Vaira Vīķe-Freiberga (1937) is the former president of Latvia and is, to this day, involved in global political affairs through various organisations. When Latvia acceded to both the EU and NATO in 2004 many attributed that success in part to dr. Vīķe-Freiberga's leadership. After two terms in office (1999 to 2007) dr. Vīķe-Freiberga co-founded the Club of Madrid and became involved in a number of other initiatives that promote democratic development, as well as organisations that stimulate the arts and culture.

Dr. Vīķe-Freiberga was an official candidate for the post of UN Secretary General in 2006, and was unofficially considered for the post of permanent president of the European Council in 2009. Dr. Vīķe-Freiberga is well-respected internationally, and has received close to a hundred honours, awards, honorary doctorates and orders of merit of the first class.

Dr. Vīķe-Freiberga's involvement in Latvian and international politics surprised many. In 1944 the Vīķe family fled the Soviet occupation of Latvia. Via refugee camps in war-battered Germany and a stay in French Morocco her family arrived in Canada, where Dr. Vīķe-Freiberga finished her education. She became a professor of psychology and linguistics at the university of Montreal, a position she held for 33 years. In all this time Dr. Vīķe-Freiberga maintained ties with her native country. Dr. Vīķe-Freiberga is also known for her studies of Latvian folksongs.

UN Food and Agriculture Organization’s Ceres Medal for her contribution to social justice, moral values and democracy, 2007

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Emperor Otto Prize for contribution in defining European identity and future, 2007

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Hayek Medal for promotion of freedom and free trade, 2009

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Konrad Adenauer Prize, 2010

And over 20 other awards and medals ranging from the academic institutions in Europe and North America to civil society. These were awarded mostly for her political work and the benefits to the Baltic states in particular, but also for academic pursuits as well as the advancement of women.

Dr. Vīķe-Freiberga also holds 16 honorary doctorates, given by Canadian universities (six), by universities from various west European countries, universities from the Baltic states as well as universities from countries in the Caucasus.

2.

Education

Secondary school

Collège de jeunes filles de Mers-Sultan, Casablanca, French Morocco

High school, Toronto, Canada

Academic

Psychology, Victoria College of the University of Toronto, B.A. in 1958, M.A. in 1960

Member to Canadian governmental consultative committee on the disposal of nuclear waste (1990 to 1991, 1995 to 1996)

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Special Envoy to the Secretary General on United Nations reform

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Chair, European Union's High Level Group on Media Freedom and Pluralism, October 2011 to January 2013

5.

Selected political achievements

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Became president in 1999 after none of the candidates from political groupings managed to secure a majority vote in parliament. She had to relinquish Canadian citizenship to be eligible for the presidency.

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Navigated a contentious bill through parliament on the use of Latvian as the only language for official proceedings. Dr. Vīķe-Freiberga blocked a bill that also required all private commercial transaction in Latvian. Due to the large Russian minority in Latvia language was and remains a contentious issue.

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In part due to the efforts of dr. Vīķe-Freiberga Latvia managed to join the European Union in 2004. During her tenure a wide range of economic and social reforms was implemented. Latvia's economy grew steadily, corruption was reduced and democratic institutions began to take root more so then in the first decade of independence.

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Similarly, dr. Vīķe-Freiberga was instrumental in Latvia's accession to NATO in 2004.

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Managed a 70 to 85 percentage approval rating as president throughout her two terms in office, a nearly unheard of feat in most democracies.

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Official candidate for the post of UN Secretary General in 2006. Eventually the South Korean diplomat Ban Ki-moon became UN Secretary General.

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In 2009 a presumed candidate for the position of permanent president of the European Council. The Belgian prime minister Van Rompuy was appointed.

Authored more then 150 articles and over a dozen books in total. Most of those publications are scholarly papers on semiotics, poetics and the structural analysis of computer-accessible texts from an oral tradition, viz. Latvian folksongs. As president Dr. Vīķe-Freiberga wrote a number of essays on Europe. These involved a wide range of topics, but the majority focused on the role and the future of the EU in a global perspective.

In interviews and speeches

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Has referred to the financial sector as 'rotten to the core' in several interviews, and called for sufficient supervisory regulation to prevent excesses by the sector, and to sever the grip of the financial sector on politics

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Frequently asked why Latvia recovered far more quickly from the financial and eurocrises, while other countries did not. Dr. Vīķe-Freiberga stressed each country's circumstances are unique, but on occasion did refer to success or failure to recover from the economic crisis as a product of the culture of the people, too, meaning people themselves should adopt a healthy attitude towards government, taxation and public goods

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Has made numerous appeals for the political leadership of Europe to inspire people, and not just to get bogged down in bureaucratic affairs. However necessary, the EU has to be framed in ideals as much as regulation